Plural Policing in Western Europe

A comparison

auteurs Elke Devroe
  Jan Terpstra
tijdschrift EJPS (ISSN: 2034-760X)
jaargang Volume 2
aflevering Issue 3: Plural Policing – Guest Editors: Jan Terpstra & Elke Devroe
onderdeel Articles
publicatie datum 10 februari 2015
taal English
pagina 235
samenvatting

One of the almost undisputed findings of contemporary policing studies is that the past few decades have witnessed a far-reaching pluralization of policing. Many countries, in different regions of the world, were confronted with the rise of new non-police providers of policing services. Increasingly, the myth of one organization (the public police) with a monopoly on policing lost its power of persuasion as a valid description of reality. Generally, the new agencies of policing concentrate on the management of petty crime and social disorder in public places. With this new situation, multiple providers, both public and private, have become involved in the prevention and management of crime and social disorder. It is often assumed that this development of the past three decades created a more or less quiet revolution (or what Bayley and Shearing (1996) called a ‘watershed’) in the systems of crime control and law enforcement. Although this claim has been disputed, also in the Anglo-Saxon world (Jones & Newburn, 2002), the proposition of the pluralization of policing often seems to have reached the status of a universal, world-wide trend.